Yeah I guess it is all down to personal choice. I used to own a 91 G60, for some reason I prefered the early dash and the slide heater controls etc, now I have a 93 VR Dizzy with a late dash.
Understandable then if your looking towards ODB2.

After a few years without my Corrado, I'm now back with the opportunity - time, money and garage space

I'm looking for a well maintained and fettled example. I'm not expecting perfect, but I don't want a car which has been unloved so I'm left with a massive to-do list straight away. I want a car I can use straight away and keep up the preventative maintenance and restoration.

Ideally, the car would have:
1. A healthy service history and be up to date
2. Not previously resprayed unless genuinely really good (No overspray, no orange peel, no painted over rubbers or masking lines etc)
3. Manual
4. No obvious rust or previous MOT fails for corrosion. (I appreciate that at this age you might have the odd spot on the underside, wheel areas etc)
5. Leather (or leather/cloth Recaro)
6. Not have (or a minimum of) the common Corrado issues, heater controls, bonnet release cable, sunroof working, spoiler workings etc
7. Post 93 (coil pack version and silver VR6 badges)
8. Not (heavily) modified, unless to a good standard and sympathetic to the cars age/fellow owner recommendations

Essentially I want a clean and useable car, someone's pride and joy who is reluctant to sell and only wants the car to go to the right home: someone to hand over the torch to me so to speak - that's the car I really want.

Posting Permissions

About us

We are the world's largest community for VW's Super Coupé!
Be it 8v, 16v, G60 or VR6 (or maybe something else!), everybody's welcome!
If this is your first visit, be sure to click register and fill out your details before you can post.

Help us

This site is run on donations. Please help keep the forum alive! •

Follow us

advertising & sponsorship

Are you a company looking for advertising that could benefits our users? For site & forum sponsorship, please see our dedicated microsite here.